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UPDATED: With music's big night coming just 24 hours after news of the singer's death, the viewership and demo scores skyrocket for the CBS broadcast.

Though no definitive correlation can be drawn as to why the Grammys saw their greatest numbers since 1984, it seems obvious that interest in the musical kudos comes from the Saturday death of singer Whitney Houston.

After producers scrambled to find fitting tributes to the late singer on less than a day's notice, fast affiliate ratings give the broadcast a whopping 39 million viewers -- its second largest ever -- and a 14.1 rating in adults 18-49. The demo showing matches its best performance since 1990 and marks a 41 percent jump over last year.

Last year's Grammys earned a 10.0 in adults 18-49 and 26.7 million viewers.

The three-and-a-half-hour awards propelled CBS to an easy win for the night, pulling a net 11.5 in adults 18-49 and 34.5 million viewers (a 2.3-rated 60 Minutes led into the broadcast).

The race for runner-up was a tight one, with ABC, Fox and NBC all giving similar showings. ABC eked out ahead of the competition with a 1.9 among adults 18-49, though. America's Funniest Home Videos saw the network's only gains, pushing 5 percent to a 2.0, while Once Upon a Time dropped 14 percent from its last original. Taking steeper drops were Desperate Housewives (1.8) and Pan Am (0.7), both down to series lows in 18-49-ers.